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Gödel, Escher, Bach

Gödel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid, also known as GEB, is a 1979 book by Douglas Hofstadter.

Gödel, Escher, Bach:
an Eternal Golden Braid
Cover of the first edition
AuthorDouglas Hofstadter
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectsConsciousness, intelligence, recursivity, mathematics
PublisherBasic Books
Publication date
1979
Pages777
ISBN978-0-465-02656-2
OCLC40724766
510/.1 21
LC ClassQA9.8 .H63 1999
Followed byI Am a Strange Loop 

By exploring common themes in the lives and works of logician Kurt Gödel, artist M. C. Escher, and composer Johann Sebastian Bach, the book expounds concepts fundamental to mathematics, symmetry, and intelligence. Through short stories, illustrations, and analysis, the book discusses how systems can acquire meaningful context despite being made of "meaningless" elements. It also discusses self-reference and formal rules, isomorphism, what it means to communicate, how knowledge can be represented and stored, the methods and limitations of symbolic representation, and even the fundamental notion of "meaning" itself.

In response to confusion over the book's theme, Hofstadter emphasized that Gödel, Escher, Bach is not about the relationships of mathematics, art, and music—but rather about how cognition emerges from hidden neurological mechanisms. One point in the book presents an analogy about how individual neurons in the brain coordinate to create a unified sense of a coherent mind by comparing it to the social organization displayed in a colony of ants.[1][2]

Gödel, Escher, Bach won the Pulitzer Prize for general non-fiction[3] and the National Book Award for Science Hardcover.[4][a] Despite the success of the book, Hofstadter felt that audiences did not adequately grasp what he felt was the main idea of the book: strange loops. In an attempt to remedy this, he published I Am a Strange Loop in 2007.

Structure edit

Gödel, Escher, Bach takes the form of interweaving narratives. The main chapters alternate with dialogues between imaginary characters, usually Achilles and the tortoise, first used by Zeno of Elea and later by Lewis Carroll in "What the Tortoise Said to Achilles". These origins are related in the first two dialogues, and later ones introduce new characters such as the Crab. These narratives frequently dip into self-reference and metafiction.

Word play also features prominently in the work. Puns are occasionally used to connect ideas, such as "the Magnificrab, Indeed" with Bach's Magnificat in D; "SHRDLU, Toy of Man's Designing" with Bach's Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring; and "Typographical Number Theory", or "TNT", which inevitably reacts explosively when it attempts to make statements about itself. One dialogue contains a story about a genie (from the Arabic "Djinn") and various "tonics" (of both the liquid and musical varieties), which is titled "Djinn and Tonic".

One dialogue in the book is written in the form of a crab canon, in which every line before the midpoint corresponds to an identical line past the midpoint. The conversation still makes sense due to uses of common phrases that can be used as either greetings or farewells ("Good day") and the positioning of lines that double as an answer to a question in the next line. Another is a sloth canon, where one character repeats the lines of another, but slower and negated.

Themes edit

The book contains many instances of recursion and self-reference, where objects and ideas speak about or refer back to themselves. One is Quining, a term Hofstadter invented in homage to Willard Van Orman Quine, referring to programs that produce their own source code. Another is the presence of a fictional author in the index, Egbert B. Gebstadter, a man with initials E, G, and B and a surname that partially matches Hofstadter. A phonograph dubbed "Record Player X" destroys itself by playing a record titled I Cannot Be Played on Record Player X (an analogy to Gödel's incompleteness theorems), an examination of canon form in music, and a discussion of Escher's lithograph of two hands drawing each other.

To describe such self-referencing objects, Hofstadter coins the term "strange loop"—a concept he examines in more depth in his follow-up book I Am a Strange Loop. To escape many of the logical contradictions brought about by these self-referencing objects, Hofstadter discusses Zen koans. He attempts to show readers how to perceive reality outside their own experience and embrace such paradoxical questions by rejecting the premise—a strategy also called "unasking".

Elements of computer science such as call stacks are also discussed in Gödel, Escher, Bach, as one dialogue describes the adventures of Achilles and the Tortoise as they make use of "pushing potion" and "popping tonic" involving entering and leaving different layers of reality. The same dialogue has a genie with a lamp containing another genie with another lamp and so on. Subsequent sections discuss the basic tenets of logic, self-referring statements, ("typeless") systems, and even programming. Hofstadter further creates BlooP and FlooP, two simple programming languages, to illustrate his point.

Puzzles edit

The book is filled with puzzles, including Hofstadter's MU puzzle, which contrasts reasoning within a defined logical system with reasoning about that system. Another example can be found in the chapter titled Contracrostipunctus, which combines the words acrostic and contrapunctus (counterpoint). In this dialogue between Achilles and the Tortoise, the author hints that there is a contrapunctal acrostic in the chapter that refers both to the author (Hofstadter) and Bach. This can be spelled out by taking the first word of each paragraph, to reveal "Hofstadter's Contracrostipunctus Acrostically Backwards Spells J. S. Bach". The second acrostic is found by taking the first letters of the words of the first, and reading them backwards to get "J S Bach", as the acrostic sentence self-referentially states.

Reception and impact edit

Gödel, Escher, Bach won the Pulitzer Prize for general non-fiction and the National Book Award for Science Hardcover.

Martin Gardner's July 1979 column in Scientific American stated, "Every few decades, an unknown author brings out a book of such depth, clarity, range, wit, beauty and originality that it is recognized at once as a major literary event."[5]

For Summer 2007, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology created an online course for high school students built around the book.[6]

In its February 19, 2010, investigative summary on the 2001 anthrax attacks, the Federal Bureau of Investigation suggested that Bruce Edwards Ivins was inspired by the book to hide secret codes based upon nucleotide sequences in the anthrax-laced letters he allegedly sent in September and October 2001,[7] using bold letters, as suggested on page 404 of the book.[8][9] It was also suggested that he attempted to hide the book from investigators by throwing it in the trash.[10]

In 2019, British mathematician Marcus du Sautoy curated a series of events at London's Barbican Centre to celebrate the book's fortieth anniversary.[11]

I Am a Strange Loop edit

Hofstadter has expressed some frustration with how Gödel, Escher, Bach was received. He felt that readers did not fully grasp that strange loops were supposed to be the central theme of the book, and attributed this confusion to the length of the book and the breadth of the topics covered.[12][13]

To remedy this issue, Hofstadter published I Am a Strange Loop in 2007, which had a more focused discussion of the idea.[13]

Translation edit

Hofstadter claims the idea of translating his book "never crossed [his] mind" when he was writing it—but when his publisher brought it up, he was "very excited about seeing [the] book in other languages, especially… French." He knew, however, that "there were a million issues to consider" when translating,[14] since the book relies not only on word-play, but on "structural puns" as well—writing where the form and content of the work mirror each other (such as the "Crab canon" dialogue, which reads almost exactly the same forwards as backwards).

Hofstadter gives an example of translation trouble in the paragraph "Mr. Tortoise, Meet Madame Tortue", saying translators "instantly ran headlong into the conflict between the feminine gender of the French noun tortue and the masculinity of my character, the Tortoise."[14] Hofstadter agreed to the translators' suggestions of naming the French character Madame Tortue, and the Italian version Signorina Tartaruga.[15] Because of other troubles translators might have retaining meaning, Hofstadter "painstakingly went through every sentence of Gödel, Escher, Bach, annotating a copy for translators into any language that might be targeted."[14]

Translation also gave Hofstadter a way to add new meaning and puns. For instance, in Chinese, the subtitle is not a translation of an Eternal Golden Braid, but a seemingly unrelated phrase Jí Yì Bì (集异璧, literally "collection of exotic jades"), which is homophonic to GEB in Chinese. Some material regarding this interplay is in Hofstadter's later book, Le Ton beau de Marot, which is mainly about translation.

Editions edit

  • Hofstadter, Douglas R. (1979), Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid, Basic Books, ISBN 0-465-026850
  • Hofstadter, Douglas R. (1999) [1979], Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid (Twentieth Anniversary Edition), Basic Books, ISBN 0-465-02656-7, retrieved 2016-03-02

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This was the award for hardcover Science. From 1980 to 1983, the National Book Award history gave separate awards to hardcover and paperback books in many categories, including several nonfiction subcategories. Most paperback award-winners were reprints of earlier works; the 1980 Science was eligible for both awards as a new book.

References edit

  1. ^ By Analogy: A talk with the most remarkable researcher in artificial intelligence today, Douglas Hofstadter, the author of Gödel, Escher, Bach Wired Magazine, November 1995
  2. ^ "Perspective of Mind: Douglas Hofstadter". www.bizint.com.
  3. ^ The Prizes, Pulitzer, 1980
  4. ^ "National Book Awards – 1980". National Book Foundation. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  5. ^ Somers, James (23 October 2013). "The Man Who Would Teach Machines to Think". The Atlantic. The Atlantic Media Company. Retrieved 25 October 2013.
  6. ^ GEB, MIT
  7. ^ (PDF). United States Department of Justice. February 19, 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-11-28. Retrieved 2010-11-10.
  8. ^ (PDF). United States Department of Justice. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-11-28. Retrieved 2010-11-10.
  9. ^ Willman, David (2011). The Mirage Man: Bruce Ivins, the Anthrax Attacks, and America's Rush to War. Bantam Books. p. 300. ISBN 9780553807752.
  10. ^ Shane, Scott (2010-02-19). "F.B.I., Laying Out Evidence, Closes Anthrax Case". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-06-09.
  11. ^ Sautoy, Marcus du (2019-03-09). "Can AI become conscious? Bach, Escher and Gödel's 'strange loops' may have the answer". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2020-07-27.
  12. ^ Hofstadter, Douglas R. (1999). Gödel, Escher, Bach. Basic Books. pp. P–2 (Twentieth-anniversary preface). ISBN 0-465-02656-7.
  13. ^ a b Boden, Margaret (2017-02-06). "Self Assembly". American Scientist. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  14. ^ a b c Hofstadter 1999, p. xxxiv.
  15. ^ Hofstadter 1999, pp. xxxiv–xxxv.

External links edit

  • Gödel, Escher, Bach at Open Library  
  • Video lectures from a summer GEB seminar for high schoolers, MIT OpenCourseWare
  • Mårten's GEB site
  • Class about GEB, at the University of Michigan
  • Java 3D game based on the GEB triplets

gödel, escher, bach, eternal, golden, braid, also, known, 1979, book, douglas, hofstadter, eternal, golden, braidcover, first, editionauthordouglas, hofstadtercountryunited, stateslanguageenglishsubjectsconsciousness, intelligence, recursivity, mathematicspubl. Godel Escher Bach an Eternal Golden Braid also known as GEB is a 1979 book by Douglas Hofstadter Godel Escher Bach an Eternal Golden BraidCover of the first editionAuthorDouglas HofstadterCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishSubjectsConsciousness intelligence recursivity mathematicsPublisherBasic BooksPublication date1979Pages777ISBN978 0 465 02656 2OCLC40724766Dewey Decimal510 1 21LC ClassQA9 8 H63 1999Followed byI Am a Strange Loop By exploring common themes in the lives and works of logician Kurt Godel artist M C Escher and composer Johann Sebastian Bach the book expounds concepts fundamental to mathematics symmetry and intelligence Through short stories illustrations and analysis the book discusses how systems can acquire meaningful context despite being made of meaningless elements It also discusses self reference and formal rules isomorphism what it means to communicate how knowledge can be represented and stored the methods and limitations of symbolic representation and even the fundamental notion of meaning itself In response to confusion over the book s theme Hofstadter emphasized that Godel Escher Bach is not about the relationships of mathematics art and music but rather about how cognition emerges from hidden neurological mechanisms One point in the book presents an analogy about how individual neurons in the brain coordinate to create a unified sense of a coherent mind by comparing it to the social organization displayed in a colony of ants 1 2 Godel Escher Bach won the Pulitzer Prize for general non fiction 3 and the National Book Award for Science Hardcover 4 a Despite the success of the book Hofstadter felt that audiences did not adequately grasp what he felt was the main idea of the book strange loops In an attempt to remedy this he published I Am a Strange Loop in 2007 Contents 1 Structure 2 Themes 3 Puzzles 4 Reception and impact 4 1 I Am a Strange Loop 5 Translation 6 Editions 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksStructure editGodel Escher Bach takes the form of interweaving narratives The main chapters alternate with dialogues between imaginary characters usually Achilles and the tortoise first used by Zeno of Elea and later by Lewis Carroll in What the Tortoise Said to Achilles These origins are related in the first two dialogues and later ones introduce new characters such as the Crab These narratives frequently dip into self reference and metafiction Word play also features prominently in the work Puns are occasionally used to connect ideas such as the Magnificrab Indeed with Bach s Magnificat in D SHRDLU Toy of Man s Designing with Bach s Jesu Joy of Man s Desiring and Typographical Number Theory or TNT which inevitably reacts explosively when it attempts to make statements about itself One dialogue contains a story about a genie from the Arabic Djinn and various tonics of both the liquid and musical varieties which is titled Djinn and Tonic One dialogue in the book is written in the form of a crab canon in which every line before the midpoint corresponds to an identical line past the midpoint The conversation still makes sense due to uses of common phrases that can be used as either greetings or farewells Good day and the positioning of lines that double as an answer to a question in the next line Another is a sloth canon where one character repeats the lines of another but slower and negated Themes editThe book contains many instances of recursion and self reference where objects and ideas speak about or refer back to themselves One is Quining a term Hofstadter invented in homage to Willard Van Orman Quine referring to programs that produce their own source code Another is the presence of a fictional author in the index Egbert B Gebstadter a man with initials E G and B and a surname that partially matches Hofstadter A phonograph dubbed Record Player X destroys itself by playing a record titled I Cannot Be Played on Record Player X an analogy to Godel s incompleteness theorems an examination of canon form in music and a discussion of Escher s lithograph of two hands drawing each other To describe such self referencing objects Hofstadter coins the term strange loop a concept he examines in more depth in his follow up book I Am a Strange Loop To escape many of the logical contradictions brought about by these self referencing objects Hofstadter discusses Zen koans He attempts to show readers how to perceive reality outside their own experience and embrace such paradoxical questions by rejecting the premise a strategy also called unasking Elements of computer science such as call stacks are also discussed in Godel Escher Bach as one dialogue describes the adventures of Achilles and the Tortoise as they make use of pushing potion and popping tonic involving entering and leaving different layers of reality The same dialogue has a genie with a lamp containing another genie with another lamp and so on Subsequent sections discuss the basic tenets of logic self referring statements typeless systems and even programming Hofstadter further creates BlooP and FlooP two simple programming languages to illustrate his point Puzzles editThe book is filled with puzzles including Hofstadter s MU puzzle which contrasts reasoning within a defined logical system with reasoning about that system Another example can be found in the chapter titled Contracrostipunctus which combines the words acrostic and contrapunctus counterpoint In this dialogue between Achilles and the Tortoise the author hints that there is a contrapunctal acrostic in the chapter that refers both to the author Hofstadter and Bach This can be spelled out by taking the first word of each paragraph to reveal Hofstadter s Contracrostipunctus Acrostically Backwards Spells J S Bach The second acrostic is found by taking the first letters of the words of the first and reading them backwards to get J S Bach as the acrostic sentence self referentially states Reception and impact editGodel Escher Bach won the Pulitzer Prize for general non fiction and the National Book Award for Science Hardcover Martin Gardner s July 1979 column in Scientific American stated Every few decades an unknown author brings out a book of such depth clarity range wit beauty and originality that it is recognized at once as a major literary event 5 For Summer 2007 the Massachusetts Institute of Technology created an online course for high school students built around the book 6 In its February 19 2010 investigative summary on the 2001 anthrax attacks the Federal Bureau of Investigation suggested that Bruce Edwards Ivins was inspired by the book to hide secret codes based upon nucleotide sequences in the anthrax laced letters he allegedly sent in September and October 2001 7 using bold letters as suggested on page 404 of the book 8 9 It was also suggested that he attempted to hide the book from investigators by throwing it in the trash 10 In 2019 British mathematician Marcus du Sautoy curated a series of events at London s Barbican Centre to celebrate the book s fortieth anniversary 11 I Am a Strange Loop edit Main article I Am a Strange Loop Hofstadter has expressed some frustration with how Godel Escher Bach was received He felt that readers did not fully grasp that strange loops were supposed to be the central theme of the book and attributed this confusion to the length of the book and the breadth of the topics covered 12 13 To remedy this issue Hofstadter published I Am a Strange Loop in 2007 which had a more focused discussion of the idea 13 Translation editHofstadter claims the idea of translating his book never crossed his mind when he was writing it but when his publisher brought it up he was very excited about seeing the book in other languages especially French He knew however that there were a million issues to consider when translating 14 since the book relies not only on word play but on structural puns as well writing where the form and content of the work mirror each other such as the Crab canon dialogue which reads almost exactly the same forwards as backwards Hofstadter gives an example of translation trouble in the paragraph Mr Tortoise Meet Madame Tortue saying translators instantly ran headlong into the conflict between the feminine gender of the French noun tortue and the masculinity of my character the Tortoise 14 Hofstadter agreed to the translators suggestions of naming the French character Madame Tortue and the Italian version Signorina Tartaruga 15 Because of other troubles translators might have retaining meaning Hofstadter painstakingly went through every sentence of Godel Escher Bach annotating a copy for translators into any language that might be targeted 14 Translation also gave Hofstadter a way to add new meaning and puns For instance in Chinese the subtitle is not a translation of an Eternal Golden Braid but a seemingly unrelated phrase Ji Yi Bi 集异璧 literally collection of exotic jades which is homophonic to GEB in Chinese Some material regarding this interplay is in Hofstadter s later book Le Ton beau de Marot which is mainly about translation Editions editHofstadter Douglas R 1979 Godel Escher Bach An Eternal Golden Braid Basic Books ISBN 0 465 026850 Hofstadter Douglas R 1999 1979 Godel Escher Bach An Eternal Golden Braid Twentieth Anniversary Edition Basic Books ISBN 0 465 02656 7 retrieved 2016 03 02See also editChinese room Church Turing thesis Collatz conjecture Fractal Heterarchy Indra s net Isomorphism John Lucas philosopher Meta Mind body problem Neural correlates of consciousness Strange loop Typographical Number TheoryNotes edit This was the award for hardcover Science From 1980 to 1983 the National Book Award history gave separate awards to hardcover and paperback books in many categories including several nonfiction subcategories Most paperback award winners were reprints of earlier works the 1980 Science was eligible for both awards as a new book References edit By Analogy A talk with the most remarkable researcher in artificial intelligence today Douglas Hofstadter the author of Godel Escher Bach Wired Magazine November 1995 Perspective of Mind Douglas Hofstadter www bizint com The Prizes Pulitzer 1980 National Book Awards 1980 National Book Foundation Retrieved 2021 07 28 Somers James 23 October 2013 The Man Who Would Teach Machines to Think The Atlantic The Atlantic Media Company Retrieved 25 October 2013 GEB MIT Amerithrax Investigative Summary PDF United States Department of Justice February 19 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 11 28 Retrieved 2010 11 10 Page 404 of Godel Escher Bach An Eternal Golden Braid PDF United States Department of Justice Archived from the original PDF on 2010 11 28 Retrieved 2010 11 10 Willman David 2011 The Mirage Man Bruce Ivins the Anthrax Attacks and America s Rush to War Bantam Books p 300 ISBN 9780553807752 Shane Scott 2010 02 19 F B I Laying Out Evidence Closes Anthrax Case The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2021 06 09 Sautoy Marcus du 2019 03 09 Can AI become conscious Bach Escher and Godel s strange loops may have the answer The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2020 07 27 Hofstadter Douglas R 1999 Godel Escher Bach Basic Books pp P 2 Twentieth anniversary preface ISBN 0 465 02656 7 a b Boden Margaret 2017 02 06 Self Assembly American Scientist Retrieved 2023 07 15 a b c Hofstadter 1999 p xxxiv Hofstadter 1999 pp xxxiv xxxv External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Godel Escher Bach Godel Escher Bach at Open Library nbsp Video lectures from a summer GEB seminar for high schoolers MIT OpenCourseWare Marten s GEB site Class about GEB at the University of Michigan Java 3D game based on the GEB triplets Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Godel Escher Bach amp oldid 1222799895, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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